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{{Infobox Military Person|name= Doroteo Arango Arámbula|lived= June 5
1878 -
July 23, 1923, [Durango,
Mexico, [Chihuahua|caption =|nickname=
Pancho VillaEl Centauro del Norte (The Centaur of the North)|allegiance=
Mexico (
antireeleccionista revolutionary forces)]
1878 – July 23 1923), better known as
Francisco or "
Pancho"
Villa, was a
Mexican Revolutionary
general. As commander of the
División del Norte (Division of the North), he was the veritable
caudillo of the Northern Mexico state of
Chihuahua, which, due to its size, mineral wealth, and proximity to the United States, made him a major player in Revolutionary military and politics. His charisma and effectiveness gave him great popularity, particularly in the North, and he was provisional Governor of Chihuahua in 1913 and 1914. While his violence and ambition prevented his being accepted into the "pantheon" of national heroes until some twenty years after his death, today his memory is honored by many Mexicans, and numerous streets and neighborhoods in
Mexico are named for him. In
1916 he raided Columbus, New Mexico, which provoked the unsuccessful
Pancho Villa Expedition commanded by General John J. Pershing, which failed miserablely in capturing Villa even though they were equipped with the latest technology of the era and a whole year in pursuit.
Villa and his supporters, known as
Villistas, employed tactics such as propaganda and
firing squads against his enemies, and Expropriation
hacienda land for distribution to peasants and soldiers. He
Train robbery and commandeered trains, and, like the other Revolutionary generals, printed
fiat money to pay for his cause. Villa's generalship was noted for the speed of its movement of troops (by railroad), the use of an elite
cavalry unit called
Los dorados ("the golden ones") (for which he earned the nickname
El Centauro del Norte (The
Centaur of the North)), artillery attacks, and recruitment of the enlisted soldiers of defeated enemy units. Many of Villa's tactics and strategies were adopted by later 20th century revolutionaries.
As one of the major (and most colorful) figures of the first successful popular revolution of the 20th century, Villa's notoriety attracted journalists,
photographers, and military
Rapparees (of both idealistic and
opportunistic stripes) from far and wide.
Villa's non-military revolutionary aims, unlike those of the Liberation Army of the South
Plan de Ayala, were not clearly defined. Villa only spoke vaguely of creating communal military colonies for his troops.
Despite extensive research by Mexican and foreign scholars, many of the details of Villa's life are in dispute.
Pre-revolutionary life
Little can be said with certainty of Doroteo Arango's early life. Most records claim he was born near
San Juan del Ríos, Durango,
Durango, on June 5,
1878, the son of Agustín Arango and María Micaela Arámbula. The boy was from an uneducated peasant family; the little schooling he received was provided by the local church-run village school. When his father died, Arango began to work as a sharecropper to help support his mother and four siblings. The generally accepted story states that he moved to Chihuahua at the age of 16, but promptly returned to his village after learning that an hacienda owner had tried to sexually assualt his younger sister. Arango confronted the man, whose name was Agustín Negrete, and shot him dead. He then stole a horse and dashed towards the rugged
Sierra Madre mountains one step ahead of the approaching police. His career as a bandit was about to begin. Mexican Military Might, an article on Pancho Villa by George Brecher from
The eXilePancho Villa underwent a transformation after meeting
Abraham González, the political representative (and future governor of the state) in Chihuahua of Francisco Madero, who was opposing the continuing and lengthy presidency of
Porfirio Díaz. González saw Villa's potential as a military ally, and helped open Villa's eyes to the political world. Villa then believed that he was fighting for the people, to break the power of the
hacienda owners (
hacendados in Spanish) over the poverty stricken
peones and
campesinos (
farmers and sharecroppers). At the time,
Chihuahua was dominated by
hacendados and mining owners. The Creel-Terrazas family alone controlled
haciendas covering in excess of 7,000,000 acres (28,000 km²), an area larger than
List of countries and outlying territories by total area.
On
November 20,
1910, as proclaimed by Madero's Plan of San Luis Potosí, the
Mexican Revolution was begun to oust the dictatorship of President Porfirio Díaz. After nearly 35 years of rule the Mexican people were thoroughly tired of corrupt government. Díaz's political situation was untenable, and his poorly paid conscript troops were no match for the motivated
antirreeleccionista (anti-reelectionist) volunteers fighting for freedom and
Francisco Madero. The
antirreeleccionistas removed Díaz from office after a few months of fighting. Villa helped defeat the federal army of Díaz in favor of Madero in
1911, most famously in the first Battle of
Ciudad Juárez, which was viewed by Americans sitting on the top of railroad boxcars in El Paso, Texas. Díaz left Mexico for exile and after an interim presidency, Madero became president. On May 1, 1919, Villa married Soledad Seanez Holguin, who became Villa's only legal wife until his death in 1923. Although many women have claimed to have been married to Villa, in 1946, the legislature recognized Miss Seanez Holguin as Villa's only legal wife after proving the pair had had a civil and a church wedding.
Most people at that time assumed that the new,
idealistic President Madero would lead Mexico into a new era of true democracy, and Villa would fade back into obscurity. But Villa's greatest days of fame were yet to come, and communism in Mexico was further off than most people living in 1911 could have imagined.
Orozco's counterrevolution against Madero
A counter-rebellion led by Pascual Orozco, started against Madero, so Villa gathered his mounted cavalry troops,
Los dorados, and fought along with General Victoriano Huerta to support Madero. However, Huerta viewed Villa as an ambitious competitor, and later accused Villa of stealing a horse and insubordination; then he had Villa sentenced to execution in an attempt to dispose of him. Reportedly, Villa was standing in front of a firing squad waiting to be shot when a telegram from President Madero was received commuting his sentence to imprisonment. Villa later escaped. During Villa's imprisonment, a zapatista who was in prison at the time provided the chance meeting which would help to improve his poor reading and writing skills, which would serve him well in the future during his service as provisional governor of the States of Mexico of Chihuahua.
Fight against Huerta's usurpation
After crushing the Orozco rebellion, Victoriano Huerta, with the Huerta's Federal Army he commanded, held the majority of military power in Mexico. Huerta saw an opportunity to make himself
dictator and began to conspire with people such as
Bernardo Reyes,
Félix Díaz (nephew of
Porfirio Diaz) and US ambassador
Henry Lane Wilson, which resulted in the
La decena trágica ("Ten Tragic Days") and the assassination of President Madero. Usurper: The Dark Shadow of Victoriano Huerta by Jim Tuck ©1999
After Madero's murder, Huerta proclaimed himself as provisional president. Venustiano Carranza then proclaimed the
Plan of Guadalupe to oust Huerta from office as an unconstitutional usurper. The new group of politicians and generals (which included Pablo González,
Álvaro Obregón,
Emiliano Zapata and Villa) who joined to support Carranza's plan, were collectively styled as the
Ejército Constitucionalista de México (
Constitutional Army), the
constitucionalista adjective added to stress the point that Huerta had not obtained power via methods prescribed by Mexico's Constitution of 1857.
Villa's hatred of Huerta became more personal and intense after
March 7,
1913, when Huerta ordered the murder of Villa's political mentor, Abraham González. Villa later recovered González's remains and gave his friend a hero's funeral in Chihuahua.
Villa joined the rebellion against Huerta, crossing the
Rio Grande (Rio Grande) into Ciudad Juárez with a mere 8 men, 2 pounds of coffee, 2 pounds of sugar, and 500 rounds of
rifle ammunition. The new United States president
Woodrow Wilson dismissed Ambassador Wilson, and began to support Carranza's cause. Villa's remarkable generalship and recruiting appeal, combined with ingenious fundraising methods to support his rebellion, would be a key factor in forcing Huerta from office a little over a year later, on
July 15,
1914.
This was the time of Villa's greatest fame and success. He recruited soldiers and able subordinates (both Mexican and
mercenary) such as Felipe Ángeles,
Sam Dreben and Ivor Thord-Gray, and raised money via methods such as
Danegeld on hostile hacienda owners (such as William Benton, who was killed in the Benton affair), and train robberies. In one notable escapade, he held 122 bars of silver ingot from a train robbery (and a Wells Fargo employee) hostage and forced
Wells Fargo to help him Fence (criminal) the bars for spendable
cash.{{cite news|first = Charles
|last = Burress
|url = http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/1999/05/05/MN17884.DTL
|title = Wells Fargo's Hush-Hush Deal With Pancho Villa
|publisher = [San Francisco Chronicle
|date = May 5, [
--> A rapid, hard-fought series of victories at Ciudad Juárez,
Tierra Blanca, Chihuahua, Chihuahua and
Ojinaga followed. Villa then became provisional governor of the state of
Chihuahua. Villa considered Tierra Blanca his most spectacular victory.Eisenhower, John S. D.
Intervention: The United States and the Mexican Revolution, 1913-1917 (New York: W. W. Norton, 1993) p. 58
As governor of Chihuahua, Villa raised more money for a drive to the south by printing fiat currency. He decreed his Banknote to be traded and accepted Par value with
gold Mexican pesos, under penalty of
Capital punishment, then forced the wealthy to trade their gold for his paper pesos by decreeing gold to be counterfeit money. He also confiscated the
gold of banks, in the case of the Banco Minero, by holding hostage a member of the bank's owning family, the wealthy and famous Terrazas clan, until the location of the bank's gold was revealed.
Villa's political stature at that time was so high that banks in
El Paso, Texas, accepted his paper pesos at face value. His generalship drew enough admiration from the US military that he and
Álvaro Obregón were invited to
Fort Bliss to meet Brigadier General John J. Pershing.
.
The new pile of loot was used to purchase draft animals, cavalry horses, arms, ammunition, Mobile Army Surgical Hospital (railroad cars and horse
ambulances staffed with Mexican and American volunteer doctors, known as
Servicio sanitario), and food, and to rebuild the railroad south of Chihuahua City. The rebuilt railroad transported Villa's troops and
artillery south, where he defeated Federal forces at
Gómez Palacio,
Torreón, and
Zacatecas. Map of Constitutionalist Army Battles
Carranza tries to halt the Villa advance, the fall of Zacatecas
After Torreón,
Venustiano Carranza issued a puzzling order for Villa to break off action south of Torreón and instead ordered him to divert to attack
Saltillo, and threatened to cut off Villa's coal supply if he did not comply. Carranza was attempmting to rob villa of his glory and keep victory for his own greedy motives. (Coal was needed for
railroad locomotives to pull
trains transporting soldiers and supplies, and was therefore necessary for any general.) This was widely seen as an attempt by Carranza to divert Villa from a direct assault on Mexico City, so as to allow Carranza's forces under Álvaro Obregón, driving in from the west via
Guadalajara, Jalisco, to take the capital first, and Obregon and Carranza did enter Mexico City ahead of Villa. This was an expensive and disruptive diversion for the
División del norte, since Villa's enlisted men were paid the then enormous sum of a
Mexican peso per day, and each day of delay cost thousands of pesos. Villa did attack Saltillo as ordered, winning that battle.
Villa, disgusted by what he saw as egoism, tendered his resignation.
Felipe Ángeles and Villa's officer staff argued for Villa to withdraw his resignation, defy Carranza's orders, and proceed to attack Zacatecas, a strategic mountainous city considered nearly impregnable. Zacatecas was the source of much of Mexico's
silver, and thus a supply of funds for whomever held it. Victory in Zacatecas would mean that Huerta's chances of holding the remainder of the country would be slim. Villa accepted Ángeles' advice, cancelled his resignation, and the
Division del norte defeated the Federals in the
Toma de Zacatecas (Taking of Zacatecas), the single bloodiest battle of the Revolution, with the military forces counting approximately 7,000 dead and 5,000 wounded, and unknown numbers of civilian casualties. (A memorial to and museum of the
Toma de Zacatecas is on the
Cerro de la Bufa, one of the key defense points in the battle of Zacatecas. Tourists use a
teleférico (aerial tramway) to reach it, due to the steep approaches. From the top, tourists may appreciate the difficulties Villa's troops had trying to dislodge Federal troops from the peak. The loss of Zacatecas in June 1914 broke the back of the Huerta regime, and Huerta left for exile on
July 14, 1914.
This was the beginning of the split between Villa the champion of the poor and the rich cynical
constitutionalistas of Carranza. Carranza's
egoismo(selfishness) would eventually become self-destructive, alienating most of the people he needed to hold power, and doom him as well.
Revolt against Carranza and Obregón
and Emiliano Zapata.
Villa was forced out of
Mexico City in 1915, following a number of incidents between himself, his troops and the citizens of the city, and the humiliation of President
Eulalio Gutiérrez. The return of Carranza and the Constitutionalists to Mexico City from Veracruz followed. Villa then rebelled against Carranza and Carranza's chief general,
Álvaro Obregón. Villa and Emiliano Zapata styled themselves as
convencionistas, supporters of the Convention of Aguascalientes.
Unfortunately, Villa's talent for generalship began to fail him in 1915. When Villa faced General Obregón in the First Battle of Celaya on
April 15, repeated charges of Villa's vaunted
cavalry proved to be no match for Obregón's Trench warfares and modern machine guns, and the
villista advance was first checked, then repulsed. In the Second battle of Celaya, Obregón lost one of his arms to
villista artillery. Nonetheless, Villa lost the battle.
Villa retrenched to
Chihuahua and attempted to refinance his revolt by having a firm in San Antonio, Texas, mint more fiat currency. But the effort met with limited success, and the value of Villa's paper pesos dropped to a fraction of their former value as doubts grew about Villa's political viability. Villa began ignoring the counsel of the most valuable member of his military staff,
Felipe Ángeles, and eventually Ángeles left for exile in Texas. Despite Carranza's unpopularity, Carranza had an able general in Obregón and most of Mexico's military power, and unlike Huerta, was not being hampered by interference from the United States.
Split with the United States and the Punitive Expedition
The United States, following the diplomatic policies of Woodrow Wilson, who believed that supporting Carranza was the best way to expedite establishment of a stable
Mexican government, refused to allow more arms to be supplied to Villa, and allowed Mexican constitutionalist troops to be relocated via US
railroads. Villa, possibly out of a sense of betrayal, began to attack Americans. He was further enraged by Obregón's use of
searchlights, powered by American electricity, to help repel a
villista night attack on the border town of
Agua Prieta,
Sonora, on November 1,1915. In January
1916, a group of
villistas attacked a train on the
Mexico North Western Railway, near Santa Isabel,
Chihuahua, and killed 18 American employees of the
ASARCO company.
Cross-border attack on New Mexico
On
March 9,
1916, Villa ordered 1,500 (disputed, one official US Army report stated "500 to 700") Mexican raiders, reportedly led by
villista general Ramón Banda Quesada, to make a cross-border attack against
Columbus, New Mexico, in response to the U.S. government's official recognition of the Carranza regime and for the loss of lives in battle due to defective bullets purchased from the United States.http://www.lib.byu.edu/estu/wwi/comment/huachuca/HI1-12.htm They attacked a detachment of the 13th US Cavalry, seized 100 horses and mules, burned the town, killed 10 soldiers and 8 civilian residents, and took much ammunition and weaponry. Villa's forces suffered the loss of 80 dead or mortally wounded and 5 captured,http://www.lib.byu.edu/estu/wwi/comment/huachuca/HI1-12.htm mostly from US machine gun emplacements.http://web.nmsu.edu/~publhist/colhist.htm
The Hunt for Pancho Villa
United States President
Woodrow Wilson responded to the Columbus raid by sending 6,000 troops under General John J. Pershing to Mexico to pursue Villa. (Wilson also dispatched several divisions of Army and National Guard troops to protect the southern US border against further raids and counterattacks.) In the U.S., this was known as the Punitive or Pancho Villa Expedition. During the search, the United States launched its first air combat mission with eight airplanes.http://www.msu.edu/course/hst/384/Mexican%20Revolution/Weapons/aeroplane.jpghttp://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3901/is_200406/ai_n9446480 At the same time Villa, was also being sought by Carranza's army. The U.S. expedition was eventually called off after failing to find Villa, and Villa successfully escaped from both armies.
Later life and assassination
After the
Pancho Villa Expedition, Villa remained at large but never regained his former stature or military power. Carranza's loss of Obregon as chief general in 1917, and his preoccupation with the continuing rebellion of the
Liberation Army of the South and Felicistas forces in the south (much closer to Mexico City and perceived as the greater threat), prevented him from applying sufficient military pressure to extinguish the Villa nuisance. Few of the Chihuahuans who could have informed on Villa were inclined to cooperate with the Carranza regime. Villa's last major raid was on Ciudad Juárez in
1919.
In 1920, Villa negotiated peace with new President Adolfo de la Huerta and ended his revolutionary activity. He went into semi-retirement, with a detachment of 50 of
dorados for protection, at the hacienda of
El Canutillo.http://ojinaga.com/canutillo/ He was assassinated three years later (1923) in Parral, Chihuahua, in his car. The assassins were never arrested, although a Durango politician, Jesús Salas Barraza, publicly claimed credit. While there is some circumstantial evidence that Álvaro Obregón or Plutarco Elías Calles was behind the killing, Villa made many enemies over his lifetime, who would have had motives to murder him.http://www.historicaltextarchive.com/sections.php?op=viewarticle&artid=166 Today Villa is remembered by many Mexicans as a folk hero.
According to Western United States folklore, grave robbers decapitated his corpse In 1926.
Villa's original death mask was hidden at the Radford School in El Paso, Texas, until the 1970s, when it was sent to the
National Museum of the Revolution in Chihuahua; other museums have ceramic and bronze copies.http://www.banderasnews.com/0607/nw-deathmask.htm
The location of the remainder of Villa's corpse is in dispute. It may be in the city cemetery of Parral, Chihuahua,http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=11736 or in Chihuahua City, or in the Monument of the Revolution in Mexico City.http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=11754343 Tombstones for Villa exist in both places. A
pawn shop in
El Paso, Texas, claims to be in possession of Villa's preserved trigger finger.http://www.kvia.com/Global/story.asp?S=5986005&nav=menu193_2http://www.elpasotimes.com/ci_5256757
His final words were reported as: "No permitas que esto acabe así. Cuentales que he dicho algo." This translates as: "Don't let it end like this. Tell them I have said something."
media:death-of-villa.ogg location in Hidalgo del Parral, Chihuahua, news reporters at the scene, and Villa's bullet riddled corpse and auto.
Warning Contains possibly disturbing images of Villa's corpse.
Villa's battles and military actions
- Battle of Ciudad Juárez (twice, in 1911 and 1913, won both times)
- Battle of Tierra Blanca (1913 won)
- Battle of Chihuahua (1913 won)
- Battle of Ojinaga (1913 won)
- Battle of Torreón and Battle of Gómez Palacio (1914 won)
- Battle of Saltillo (1914 won)
- Battle of Zacatecas (1914 won)
- Battle of Celaya (1915 lost)
- Attack on Agua Prieta (1915 lost)
- Attack on Columbus, New Mexico (1916 successful & won)
Villa's personality, eccentricities and habits, trivia and legends about Villa
As noted in the introduction, the tumultuous times of the
Mexican revolution in which Villa lived means that many details of Villa's life will never be completely verifiable. Even contemporary press and eyewitness accounts often conflict, each side of the conflict had a propaganda machine churning out its own spin on events. However, listing some of the legends and stories is important for explaining Villa's political mystique.
John Reed (journalist)'s book
Insurgent Mexico relates many tales of Villa, and has stories of Reed's personal encounters with the general.
John Eisenhower's book
Intervention! details the US interventions in
Tampico and
Chihuahua during the Revolution. Freidrich Katz's
Life and Times of Pancho Villa is the most thorough scholarly English language treatment of Villa's life.
- Villa was noted as a school builder, proposing schools in Chihuahua wherever he saw children gathered.
- He was a lover of ice cream. One corrido song of the revolution states that Villa made a point of stopping for ice cream before gunning down a betrayer on the streets of Chihuahua.
- He was a lifelong teetotaler, and supposedly gagged on a toast of brandy offered to him by Emiliano Zapata.
- As a fact, Villa prohibited his soliders and leaders from consuming alcoholic beverages. Anyone caught drinking alcohol or intoxicated would be considered a first and last offense-the punishment is being gunned down on the spot without warning. Villa required that his soldiers are alert, sober and ready to fight, if needed, at an instant.
- He was a dancer of legendary stamina. Reed claims Villa arrived late for the Battle of Torreón, after an all-night dancing stint. Reed may have cleaned up the account a bit to avoid having his book or writings Anthony Comstock by the Post Office.
- Villa was a wikt:lady's man and a polygamy. Numbers on how many women Villa married vary, but it has been speculated as many as 26.
- Villa supposedly escaped the Pancho Villa Expedition by having himself sewn up inside the body of a dead horse.
- Some of Villa's soldiers, in Mufti (dress), reportedly attended a movie along with Pershing's men, during the Pancho Villa Expedition.
- Villa may have been involved in the demise of Ambrose Bierce.
- Villa's legal widow, Luz Corral, operated Villa's former mansion, Quinta Luz as the Museo de la Revolución in Chihuahua, Chihuahua until her death in 1981. The museum is still in operation, and Villa's death car is on display.http://www.ah-chihuahua.com/regiones/region_chihuahua/chihuahua_revolucion.htmhttp://www.mexicodesconocido.com.mx/english/zonas_arqueologicas_y_museos/norte/detalle.cfm?idsec=42&idsub=0&idpag=1411 Photo of Vills's death car at Museo de la Revolucion
- There are unconfirmed rumors that the Skull and Bones club at Yale University is in possession of Villa's skull.http://www.yaleherald.com/article.php?Article=2801
- The song La Cucaracha was modified and popularized by Villa's troops to mock Venustiano Carranza. Multiple theories exist over exactly who or what the oblique reference to the cockroach, was meant to refer to (possibly Villa's car or Villa's army).http://www.straightdope.com/columns/010727.html As with other corridos, the song was an oral tradition and verses were frequently made up or modified impromptu by whoever sang it.
- The son of Giuseppe Garibaldi, noted Italy patriot, was a colonel on Villa's military staff. Garibaldi, Jr. was sacked by Villa for claiming too much credit in the press for Villa's 1911 victory in Ciudad Juárez.
- Rodolfo Fierro, Villa's sidekick and noted cold-blooded killer, reportedly once killed a random passerby in the streets of Chihuahua, Chihuahua, to settle a bet on whether a dying man fell forwards or backwards. (He fell backwards - so Fierro won the bet). Fierro also reportedly had condemned men line up single file, so as to dispatch multiple victims with a single bullet.
- At the Battle of Mexican Revolution, Chihuahua, Villa (or possibly Rodolfo Fierro) invented the tactic of máquina loca (Crazy Locomotive), namely hijacking a locomotive behind enemy lines, packing it with explosives, then sending it with the throttle tied down into the rows of railroad cars at the enemy's rear.
- In the Benton affair, Villa and Mexican revolutionaries in general earned the lifelong enmity of Winston Churchill, by executing William Benton, an obstinate English hacienda owner.
- In 1913, Villa employed a railroad coal train as a Trojan horse, packing it with his troops and backing it into the railroad station in Ciudad Juárez, to surprise and defeat the federal troops there.http://www.historicaltextarchive.com/sections.php?op=viewarticle&artid=735
- The Division del norte had no foot infantry per se, Villa attempted to supply a horse for each of his soldiers.
- Photos showing General Villa posing with a robot are a modern day hoax.http://www.bigredhair.com/boilerplate/soldier/bp.pancho.html Robotic technology did not exist in Villa's day, and Villa's military did not employ robots. See: Boilerplate (robot).
- Some Treasure magazines, such as Lost Treasure regularly report that he has buried loot worth Billions of US dollars all over Mexico and the US.
- A French synth pop group Magazine 60 titled a synth pop song called "Pancho Villa" in 1987.
German involvement in Villa's later campaigns
Prior to the Villa-Carranza split in 1915, there is no credible evidence that Villa co-operated with or accepted any help from the German government or agents. Villa was supplied arms from the USA, employed American
Mercenary and doctors, portrayed as a hero in the US media, and did not object to the 1914
United States occupation of Veracruz, 1914 (Villa's observation was that the occupation merely hurt Huerta). The German consul in Torreón made entreaties to Villa, offering him arms and money to occupy the port and oil fields of Tampico to enable German ships to dock there, this offer was rejected by Villa.
Germany and German agents did attempt to interfere, unsuccessfully, in the Mexican Revolution. Germans attempted to plot with Victoriano Huerta to assist him to retake the country, and in the infamous
Zimmermann Telegram to the Mexican government, proposed an alliance with the government of Venustiano Carranza.
There were documented contacts between Villa and the Germans, after Villa's split with the Constitutionalists. Prinicipally this was in the person of Felix A. Sommerfeld, (noted in Katz's book), who in 1915 funneled $340,000 of German money to the U.S. Repeating Arms Company to purchase ammunition. However, the actions of Sommerfeld indicate he was likely acting in his own self interest (he supposedly was paid a $5,000 per month stipend for supplying dynamite and arms to Villa, a fortune in
1915, and acted as a double agent for Carranza). Villa's actions were hardly that of a German catspaw, rather, it appears that Villa only resorted to German assistance after other sources of money and arms were cut off.http://www.mexconnect.com/mex_/panvill.html
At the time of Villa's attack on
Columbus, New Mexico, in
1916, Villa's military power had been marginalized and was mostly an impotent nuisance (he was repulsed at Columbus by a small cavalry detachment, albeit after doing a lot of damage), his theatre of operations was mainly limited to western
Chihuahua, he was
persona non grata with Mexico's ruling Carranza constitutionalists, and the subject of an
embargo by the United States, so communication or further shipments of arms between the Germans and Villa would have been difficult.A plausible explanation of any Villa-German contacts after 1915 would be that they were a futile extension of increasingly desperate German diplomatic efforts and
villista pipe dreams of victory as progress of their respective wars bogged down. Villa effectively did not have anything useful to offer in exchange for German help at that point.
When weighing claims of Villa conspiring with Germans, one should take into account that at the time, portraying Villa as a German sympathizer served the propaganda ends of both Carranza and Wilson.
The use of Mauser rifles and carbines by Villa's forces does not necessarily indicate any German connection, these were widely used by all parties in the
Mexican Revolution, Mauser longarms being enormously popular weapons and having been standard issue in the
Mexican Army, which had begun adopting 7 mm Mauser system arms as early as 1895. Mexican Secretary Of Defense - Armies of the Revolution
Pancho Villa in films, video, and television
Villa represented in films by himself in 1912,
1913, and 1914. Many other actors have represented him, such as:
Footnotes
References
- Guadalupe Villa y Rosa Helia Villa (eds.), Retrato autobiográfico, 1894-1914, Mexico City, Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México: Taurus: Santillana Ediciones Generales, c2003 (2004 printing). ISBN 968-19-1311-6.
- Friedrich Katz, Life and Times of Pancho Villa, Stanford University Press, 1998, ISBN 0-8047-3046-6
- Jeff Howell, Pancho Villa, Outlaw, Hero, Patriot, Cutthroat: Evaluating the Many Faces of Historical Text Archive
External links
- Statue of Pancho Villa, the Mexican Revolutionary Leader in Tucson, Arizona, United States
- Encyclopædia Britannica, Pancho Villa
- Photos of Villa and the Mexican Revolution - Warning Some disturbing images. Some of these photos are also in the book The Wind That Swept Mexico.
{{Infobox Military Person|name= Doroteo Arango Arámbula|lived=
June 5 1878 - July 23, 1923, [Durango, Mexico, [Chihuahua|caption =|nickname=
Pancho VillaEl Centauro del Norte (The Centaur of the North)|allegiance=
Mexico (
antireeleccionista revolutionary forces)]
1878 – July 23
1923), better known as
Francisco or "
Pancho"
Villa, was a
Mexican Revolutionary general. As commander of the
División del Norte (Division of the North), he was the veritable caudillo of the Northern
Mexico state of
Chihuahua, which, due to its size, mineral wealth, and proximity to the United States, made him a major player in Revolutionary military and politics. His charisma and effectiveness gave him great popularity, particularly in the North, and he was provisional
Governor of Chihuahua in 1913 and 1914. While his violence and ambition prevented his being accepted into the "pantheon" of national heroes until some twenty years after his death, today his memory is honored by many Mexicans, and numerous streets and neighborhoods in Mexico are named for him. In 1916 he raided
Columbus, New Mexico, which provoked the unsuccessful
Pancho Villa Expedition commanded by General John J. Pershing, which failed miserablely in capturing Villa even though they were equipped with the latest technology of the era and a whole year in pursuit.
Villa and his supporters, known as Villistas, employed tactics such as propaganda and
firing squads against his enemies, and Expropriation hacienda land for distribution to peasants and soldiers. He
Train robbery and commandeered
trains, and, like the other Revolutionary generals, printed
fiat money to pay for his cause. Villa's generalship was noted for the speed of its movement of troops (by railroad), the use of an elite cavalry unit called
Los dorados ("the golden ones") (for which he earned the nickname
El Centauro del Norte (The Centaur of the North)), artillery attacks, and recruitment of the enlisted soldiers of defeated enemy units. Many of Villa's tactics and strategies were adopted by later 20th century revolutionaries.
As one of the major (and most colorful) figures of the first successful popular revolution of the 20th century, Villa's notoriety attracted
journalists,
photographers, and military Rapparees (of both idealistic and opportunistic stripes) from far and wide.
Villa's non-military revolutionary aims, unlike those of the Liberation Army of the South Plan de Ayala, were not clearly defined. Villa only spoke vaguely of creating communal military colonies for his troops.
Despite extensive research by Mexican and foreign scholars, many of the details of Villa's life are in dispute.
Pre-revolutionary life
Little can be said with certainty of Doroteo Arango's early life. Most records claim he was born near
San Juan del Ríos, Durango, Durango, on June 5,
1878, the son of Agustín Arango and María Micaela Arámbula. The boy was from an uneducated peasant family; the little schooling he received was provided by the local church-run village school. When his father died, Arango began to work as a
sharecropper to help support his mother and four siblings. The generally accepted story states that he moved to Chihuahua at the age of 16, but promptly returned to his village after learning that an hacienda owner had tried to sexually assualt his younger sister. Arango confronted the man, whose name was Agustín Negrete, and shot him dead. He then stole a horse and dashed towards the rugged
Sierra Madre mountains one step ahead of the approaching police. His career as a bandit was about to begin. Mexican Military Might, an article on Pancho Villa by
George Brecher from The eXile
Pancho Villa underwent a transformation after meeting Abraham González, the political representative (and future governor of the state) in Chihuahua of Francisco Madero, who was opposing the continuing and lengthy presidency of Porfirio Díaz. González saw Villa's potential as a military ally, and helped open Villa's eyes to the political world. Villa then believed that he was fighting for the people, to break the power of the
hacienda owners (
hacendados in Spanish) over the poverty stricken
peones and
campesinos (
farmers and sharecroppers). At the time,
Chihuahua was dominated by
hacendados and
mining owners. The Creel-Terrazas family alone controlled
haciendas covering in excess of 7,000,000 acres (28,000 km²), an area larger than List of countries and outlying territories by total area.
On
November 20, 1910, as proclaimed by Madero's
Plan of San Luis Potosí, the
Mexican Revolution was begun to oust the dictatorship of President
Porfirio Díaz. After nearly 35 years of rule the Mexican people were thoroughly tired of corrupt government. Díaz's political situation was untenable, and his poorly paid conscript troops were no match for the motivated
antirreeleccionista (anti-reelectionist) volunteers fighting for freedom and
Francisco Madero. The
antirreeleccionistas removed Díaz from office after a few months of fighting. Villa helped defeat the federal army of Díaz in favor of Madero in
1911, most famously in the first Battle of Ciudad Juárez, which was viewed by Americans sitting on the top of railroad
boxcars in El Paso, Texas. Díaz left Mexico for exile and after an interim presidency, Madero became president. On May 1, 1919, Villa married Soledad Seanez Holguin, who became Villa's only legal wife until his death in 1923. Although many women have claimed to have been married to Villa, in 1946, the legislature recognized Miss Seanez Holguin as Villa's only legal wife after proving the pair had had a civil and a church wedding.
Most people at that time assumed that the new, idealistic President Madero would lead Mexico into a new era of true
democracy, and Villa would fade back into obscurity. But Villa's greatest days of fame were yet to come, and communism in Mexico was further off than most people living in 1911 could have imagined.
Orozco's counterrevolution against Madero
A counter-rebellion led by Pascual Orozco, started against Madero, so Villa gathered his mounted
cavalry troops,
Los dorados, and fought along with General Victoriano Huerta to support Madero. However, Huerta viewed Villa as an ambitious competitor, and later accused Villa of stealing a horse and insubordination; then he had Villa sentenced to execution in an attempt to dispose of him. Reportedly, Villa was standing in front of a firing squad waiting to be shot when a telegram from President Madero was received commuting his sentence to imprisonment. Villa later escaped. During Villa's imprisonment, a zapatista who was in prison at the time provided the chance meeting which would help to improve his poor reading and writing skills, which would serve him well in the future during his service as provisional governor of the
States of Mexico of Chihuahua.
Fight against Huerta's usurpation
After crushing the Orozco rebellion, Victoriano Huerta, with the Huerta's Federal Army he commanded, held the majority of military power in Mexico. Huerta saw an opportunity to make himself
dictator and began to conspire with people such as Bernardo Reyes, Félix Díaz (nephew of Porfirio Diaz) and US ambassador
Henry Lane Wilson, which resulted in the
La decena trágica ("Ten Tragic Days") and the assassination of President Madero. Usurper: The Dark Shadow of Victoriano Huerta by Jim Tuck ©1999
After Madero's murder, Huerta proclaimed himself as provisional president. Venustiano Carranza then proclaimed the
Plan of Guadalupe to oust Huerta from office as an unconstitutional usurper. The new group of politicians and generals (which included Pablo González,
Álvaro Obregón,
Emiliano Zapata and Villa) who joined to support Carranza's plan, were collectively styled as the
Ejército Constitucionalista de México (
Constitutional Army), the
constitucionalista adjective added to stress the point that Huerta had not obtained power via methods prescribed by Mexico's
Constitution of 1857.
Villa's hatred of Huerta became more personal and intense after March 7, 1913, when Huerta ordered the murder of Villa's political mentor, Abraham González. Villa later recovered González's remains and gave his friend a hero's funeral in Chihuahua.
Villa joined the rebellion against Huerta, crossing the Rio Grande (Rio Grande) into
Ciudad Juárez with a mere 8 men, 2 pounds of coffee, 2 pounds of sugar, and 500 rounds of rifle
ammunition. The new United States president
Woodrow Wilson dismissed Ambassador Wilson, and began to support Carranza's cause. Villa's remarkable generalship and recruiting appeal, combined with ingenious fundraising methods to support his rebellion, would be a key factor in forcing Huerta from office a little over a year later, on
July 15,1914.
This was the time of Villa's greatest fame and success. He recruited soldiers and able subordinates (both Mexican and
mercenary) such as
Felipe Ángeles, Sam Dreben and Ivor Thord-Gray, and raised money via methods such as Danegeld on hostile hacienda owners (such as William Benton, who was killed in the
Benton affair), and train robberies. In one notable escapade, he held 122 bars of
silver ingot from a train robbery (and a Wells Fargo employee) hostage and forced Wells Fargo to help him
Fence (criminal) the bars for spendable
cash.{{cite news|first = Charles
|last = Burress
|url = http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/1999/05/05/MN17884.DTL
|title = Wells Fargo's Hush-Hush Deal With Pancho Villa
|publisher = [San Francisco Chronicle
|date = May 5, [
--> A rapid, hard-fought series of victories at Ciudad Juárez,
Tierra Blanca, Chihuahua, Chihuahua and Ojinaga followed. Villa then became provisional governor of the state of Chihuahua. Villa considered Tierra Blanca his most spectacular victory.Eisenhower, John S. D.
Intervention: The United States and the Mexican Revolution, 1913-1917 (New York: W. W. Norton, 1993) p. 58
As governor of Chihuahua, Villa raised more money for a drive to the south by printing fiat currency. He decreed his
Banknote to be traded and accepted Par value with gold Mexican pesos, under penalty of
Capital punishment, then forced the wealthy to trade their gold for his paper pesos by decreeing gold to be counterfeit money. He also confiscated the gold of banks, in the case of the Banco Minero, by holding hostage a member of the bank's owning family, the wealthy and famous Terrazas clan, until the location of the bank's gold was revealed.
Villa's political stature at that time was so high that banks in El Paso, Texas, accepted his paper pesos at face value. His generalship drew enough admiration from the US military that he and
Álvaro Obregón were invited to
Fort Bliss to meet Brigadier General John J. Pershing.
.
The new pile of loot was used to purchase draft animals, cavalry horses, arms, ammunition, Mobile Army Surgical Hospital (railroad cars and horse ambulances staffed with Mexican and American volunteer doctors, known as
Servicio sanitario), and food, and to rebuild the railroad south of Chihuahua City. The rebuilt railroad transported Villa's troops and
artillery south, where he defeated Federal forces at Gómez Palacio,
Torreón, and Zacatecas. Map of Constitutionalist Army Battles
Carranza tries to halt the Villa advance, the fall of Zacatecas
After Torreón,
Venustiano Carranza issued a puzzling order for Villa to break off action south of
Torreón and instead ordered him to divert to attack Saltillo, and threatened to cut off Villa's coal supply if he did not comply. Carranza was attempmting to rob villa of his glory and keep victory for his own greedy motives. (Coal was needed for railroad
locomotives to pull
trains transporting soldiers and supplies, and was therefore necessary for any general.) This was widely seen as an attempt by Carranza to divert Villa from a direct assault on Mexico City, so as to allow Carranza's forces under Álvaro Obregón, driving in from the west via
Guadalajara, Jalisco, to take the capital first, and Obregon and Carranza did enter Mexico City ahead of Villa. This was an expensive and disruptive diversion for the
División del norte, since Villa's enlisted men were paid the then enormous sum of a
Mexican peso per day, and each day of delay cost thousands of pesos. Villa did attack Saltillo as ordered, winning that battle.
Villa, disgusted by what he saw as
egoism, tendered his resignation. Felipe Ángeles and Villa's officer staff argued for Villa to withdraw his resignation, defy Carranza's orders, and proceed to attack
Zacatecas, a strategic mountainous city considered nearly impregnable. Zacatecas was the source of much of Mexico's silver, and thus a supply of funds for whomever held it. Victory in Zacatecas would mean that Huerta's chances of holding the remainder of the country would be slim. Villa accepted Ángeles' advice, cancelled his resignation, and the
Division del norte defeated the Federals in the
Toma de Zacatecas (Taking of Zacatecas), the single bloodiest battle of the Revolution, with the military forces counting approximately 7,000 dead and 5,000 wounded, and unknown numbers of civilian casualties. (A memorial to and museum of the
Toma de Zacatecas is on the
Cerro de la Bufa, one of the key defense points in the battle of Zacatecas. Tourists use a
teleférico (aerial tramway) to reach it, due to the steep approaches. From the top, tourists may appreciate the difficulties Villa's troops had trying to dislodge Federal troops from the peak. The loss of Zacatecas in June 1914 broke the back of the Huerta regime, and Huerta left for exile on July 14,
1914.
This was the beginning of the split between Villa the champion of the poor and the rich cynical
constitutionalistas of Carranza. Carranza's
egoismo(selfishness) would eventually become self-destructive, alienating most of the people he needed to hold power, and doom him as well.
Revolt against Carranza and Obregón
and Emiliano Zapata.
Villa was forced out of Mexico City in
1915, following a number of incidents between himself, his troops and the citizens of the city, and the humiliation of President
Eulalio Gutiérrez. The return of Carranza and the Constitutionalists to Mexico City from Veracruz followed. Villa then rebelled against Carranza and Carranza's chief general, Álvaro Obregón. Villa and
Emiliano Zapata styled themselves as
convencionistas, supporters of the
Convention of Aguascalientes.
Unfortunately, Villa's talent for generalship began to fail him in 1915. When Villa faced General Obregón in the First
Battle of Celaya on April 15, repeated charges of Villa's vaunted cavalry proved to be no match for Obregón's
Trench warfares and modern machine guns, and the
villista advance was first checked, then repulsed. In the Second battle of Celaya, Obregón lost one of his arms to
villista artillery. Nonetheless, Villa lost the battle.
Villa retrenched to Chihuahua and attempted to refinance his revolt by having a firm in San Antonio, Texas, mint more fiat currency. But the effort met with limited success, and the value of Villa's paper pesos dropped to a fraction of their former value as doubts grew about Villa's political viability. Villa began ignoring the counsel of the most valuable member of his military staff, Felipe Ángeles, and eventually Ángeles left for exile in Texas. Despite Carranza's unpopularity, Carranza had an able general in Obregón and most of Mexico's military power, and unlike Huerta, was not being hampered by interference from the
United States.
Split with the United States and the Punitive Expedition
The United States, following the diplomatic policies of Woodrow Wilson, who believed that supporting Carranza was the best way to expedite establishment of a stable
Mexican government, refused to allow more arms to be supplied to Villa, and allowed Mexican constitutionalist troops to be relocated via US railroads. Villa, possibly out of a sense of betrayal, began to attack Americans. He was further enraged by Obregón's use of
searchlights, powered by American electricity, to help repel a
villista night attack on the border town of
Agua Prieta, Sonora, on November 1,1915. In January 1916, a group of
villistas attacked a train on the
Mexico North Western Railway, near
Santa Isabel,
Chihuahua, and killed 18 American employees of the
ASARCO company.
Cross-border attack on New Mexico
On
March 9,
1916, Villa ordered 1,500 (disputed, one official US Army report stated "500 to 700") Mexican raiders, reportedly led by
villista general Ramón Banda Quesada, to make a cross-border attack against Columbus, New Mexico, in response to the U.S. government's official recognition of the Carranza regime and for the loss of lives in battle due to defective bullets purchased from the United States.http://www.lib.byu.edu/estu/wwi/comment/huachuca/HI1-12.htm They attacked a detachment of the 13th
US Cavalry, seized 100 horses and mules, burned the town, killed 10 soldiers and 8 civilian residents, and took much ammunition and weaponry. Villa's forces suffered the loss of 80 dead or mortally wounded and 5 captured,http://www.lib.byu.edu/estu/wwi/comment/huachuca/HI1-12.htm mostly from US machine gun emplacements.http://web.nmsu.edu/~publhist/colhist.htm
The Hunt for Pancho Villa
United States President
Woodrow Wilson responded to the Columbus raid by sending 6,000 troops under General John J. Pershing to Mexico to pursue Villa. (Wilson also dispatched several divisions of Army and National Guard troops to protect the southern US border against further raids and counterattacks.) In the U.S., this was known as the Punitive or
Pancho Villa Expedition. During the search, the United States launched its first air combat mission with eight airplanes.http://www.msu.edu/course/hst/384/Mexican%20Revolution/Weapons/aeroplane.jpghttp://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3901/is_200406/ai_n9446480 At the same time Villa, was also being sought by Carranza's army. The U.S. expedition was eventually called off after failing to find Villa, and Villa successfully escaped from both armies.
Later life and assassination
After the Pancho Villa Expedition, Villa remained at large but never regained his former stature or military power. Carranza's loss of Obregon as chief general in
1917, and his preoccupation with the continuing rebellion of the
Liberation Army of the South and
Felicistas forces in the south (much closer to Mexico City and perceived as the greater threat), prevented him from applying sufficient military pressure to extinguish the Villa nuisance. Few of the Chihuahuans who could have informed on Villa were inclined to cooperate with the Carranza regime. Villa's last major raid was on Ciudad Juárez in
1919.
In 1920, Villa negotiated peace with new President
Adolfo de la Huerta and ended his revolutionary activity. He went into semi-retirement, with a detachment of 50 of
dorados for protection, at the hacienda of El Canutillo.http://ojinaga.com/canutillo/ He was assassinated three years later (1923) in Parral, Chihuahua, in his car. The assassins were never arrested, although a Durango politician, Jesús Salas Barraza, publicly claimed credit. While there is some circumstantial evidence that Álvaro Obregón or Plutarco Elías Calles was behind the killing, Villa made many enemies over his lifetime, who would have had motives to murder him.http://www.historicaltextarchive.com/sections.php?op=viewarticle&artid=166 Today Villa is remembered by many Mexicans as a
folk hero.
According to
Western United States folklore, grave robbers decapitated his corpse In 1926.
Villa's original death mask was hidden at the Radford School in El Paso, Texas, until the 1970s, when it was sent to the National Museum of the Revolution in Chihuahua; other museums have ceramic and bronze copies.http://www.banderasnews.com/0607/nw-deathmask.htm
The location of the remainder of Villa's corpse is in dispute. It may be in the city cemetery of
Parral, Chihuahua,http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=11736 or in Chihuahua City, or in the Monument of the Revolution in Mexico City.http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=11754343 Tombstones for Villa exist in both places. A pawn shop in
El Paso, Texas, claims to be in possession of Villa's preserved trigger finger.http://www.kvia.com/Global/story.asp?S=5986005&nav=menu193_2http://www.elpasotimes.com/ci_5256757
His final words were reported as: "No permitas que esto acabe así. Cuentales que he dicho algo." This translates as: "Don't let it end like this. Tell them I have said something."
media:death-of-villa.ogg location in Hidalgo del Parral, Chihuahua, news reporters at the scene, and Villa's bullet riddled corpse and auto.
Warning Contains possibly disturbing images of Villa's corpse.
Villa's battles and military actions
Villa's personality, eccentricities and habits, trivia and legends about Villa
As noted in the introduction, the tumultuous times of the Mexican revolution in which Villa lived means that many details of Villa's life will never be completely verifiable. Even contemporary press and eyewitness accounts often conflict, each side of the conflict had a propaganda machine churning out its own spin on events. However, listing some of the legends and stories is important for explaining Villa's political mystique.
John Reed (journalist)'s book
Insurgent Mexico relates many tales of Villa, and has stories of Reed's personal encounters with the general.
John Eisenhower's book
Intervention! details the US interventions in Tampico and
Chihuahua during the Revolution. Freidrich Katz's
Life and Times of Pancho Villa is the most thorough scholarly English language treatment of Villa's life.
- Villa was noted as a school builder, proposing schools in Chihuahua wherever he saw children gathered.
- He was a lover of ice cream. One corrido song of the revolution states that Villa made a point of stopping for ice cream before gunning down a betrayer on the streets of Chihuahua.
- He was a lifelong teetotaler, and supposedly gagged on a toast of brandy offered to him by Emiliano Zapata.
- As a fact, Villa prohibited his soliders and leaders from consuming alcoholic beverages. Anyone caught drinking alcohol or intoxicated would be considered a first and last offense-the punishment is being gunned down on the spot without warning. Villa required that his soldiers are alert, sober and ready to fight, if needed, at an instant.
- He was a dancer of legendary stamina. Reed claims Villa arrived late for the Battle of Torreón, after an all-night dancing stint. Reed may have cleaned up the account a bit to avoid having his book or writings Anthony Comstock by the Post Office.
- Villa was a wikt:lady's man and a polygamy. Numbers on how many women Villa married vary, but it has been speculated as many as 26.
- Villa supposedly escaped the Pancho Villa Expedition by having himself sewn up inside the body of a dead horse.
- Some of Villa's soldiers, in Mufti (dress), reportedly attended a movie along with Pershing's men, during the Pancho Villa Expedition.
- Villa may have been involved in the demise of Ambrose Bierce.
- Villa's legal widow, Luz Corral, operated Villa's former mansion, Quinta Luz as the Museo de la Revolución in Chihuahua, Chihuahua until her death in 1981. The museum is still in operation, and Villa's death car is on display.http://www.ah-chihuahua.com/regiones/region_chihuahua/chihuahua_revolucion.htmhttp://www.mexicodesconocido.com.mx/english/zonas_arqueologicas_y_museos/norte/detalle.cfm?idsec=42&idsub=0&idpag=1411 Photo of Vills's death car at Museo de la Revolucion
- There are unconfirmed rumors that the Skull and Bones club at Yale University is in possession of Villa's skull.http://www.yaleherald.com/article.php?Article=2801
- The song La Cucaracha was modified and popularized by Villa's troops to mock Venustiano Carranza. Multiple theories exist over exactly who or what the oblique reference to the cockroach, was meant to refer to (possibly Villa's car or Villa's army).http://www.straightdope.com/columns/010727.html As with other corridos, the song was an oral tradition and verses were frequently made up or modified impromptu by whoever sang it.
- The son of Giuseppe Garibaldi, noted Italy patriot, was a colonel on Villa's military staff. Garibaldi, Jr. was sacked by Villa for claiming too much credit in the press for Villa's 1911 victory in Ciudad Juárez.
- Rodolfo Fierro, Villa's sidekick and noted cold-blooded killer, reportedly once killed a random passerby in the streets of Chihuahua, Chihuahua, to settle a bet on whether a dying man fell forwards or backwards. (He fell backwards - so Fierro won the bet). Fierro also reportedly had condemned men line up single file, so as to dispatch multiple victims with a single bullet.
- At the Battle of Mexican Revolution, Chihuahua, Villa (or possibly Rodolfo Fierro) invented the tactic of máquina loca (Crazy Locomotive), namely hijacking a locomotive behind enemy lines, packing it with explosives, then sending it with the throttle tied down into the rows of railroad cars at the enemy's rear.
- In the Benton affair, Villa and Mexican revolutionaries in general earned the lifelong enmity of Winston Churchill, by executing William Benton, an obstinate English hacienda owner.
- In 1913, Villa employed a railroad coal train as a Trojan horse, packing it with his troops and backing it into the railroad station in Ciudad Juárez, to surprise and defeat the federal troops there.http://www.historicaltextarchive.com/sections.php?op=viewarticle&artid=735
- The Division del norte had no foot infantry per se, Villa attempted to supply a horse for each of his soldiers.
- Photos showing General Villa posing with a robot are a modern day hoax.http://www.bigredhair.com/boilerplate/soldier/bp.pancho.html Robotic technology did not exist in Villa's day, and Villa's military did not employ robots. See: Boilerplate (robot).
- Some Treasure magazines, such as Lost Treasure regularly report that he has buried loot worth Billions of US dollars all over Mexico and the US.
- A French synth pop group Magazine 60 titled a synth pop song called "Pancho Villa" in 1987.
German involvement in Villa's later campaigns
Prior to the Villa-Carranza split in 1915, there is no credible evidence that Villa co-operated with or accepted any help from the German government or agents. Villa was supplied arms from the USA, employed American Mercenary and doctors, portrayed as a hero in the US media, and did not object to the 1914
United States occupation of Veracruz, 1914 (Villa's observation was that the occupation merely hurt Huerta). The German consul in Torreón made entreaties to Villa, offering him arms and money to occupy the port and oil fields of Tampico to enable German ships to dock there, this offer was rejected by Villa.
Germany and German agents did attempt to interfere, unsuccessfully, in the
Mexican Revolution. Germans attempted to plot with Victoriano Huerta to assist him to retake the country, and in the infamous
Zimmermann Telegram to the Mexican government, proposed an alliance with the government of Venustiano Carranza.
There were documented contacts between Villa and the Germans, after Villa's split with the Constitutionalists. Prinicipally this was in the person of Felix A. Sommerfeld, (noted in Katz's book), who in 1915 funneled $340,000 of German money to the
U.S. Repeating Arms Company to purchase ammunition. However, the actions of Sommerfeld indicate he was likely acting in his own self interest (he supposedly was paid a $5,000 per month stipend for supplying dynamite and arms to Villa, a fortune in 1915, and acted as a double agent for Carranza). Villa's actions were hardly that of a German catspaw, rather, it appears that Villa only resorted to German assistance after other sources of money and arms were cut off.http://www.mexconnect.com/mex_/panvill.html
At the time of Villa's attack on
Columbus, New Mexico, in
1916, Villa's military power had been marginalized and was mostly an impotent nuisance (he was repulsed at Columbus by a small cavalry detachment, albeit after doing a lot of damage), his theatre of operations was mainly limited to western
Chihuahua, he was
persona non grata with Mexico's ruling Carranza constitutionalists, and the subject of an
embargo by the
United States, so communication or further shipments of arms between the Germans and Villa would have been difficult.A plausible explanation of any Villa-German contacts after 1915 would be that they were a futile extension of increasingly desperate German diplomatic efforts and
villista pipe dreams of victory as progress of their respective wars bogged down. Villa effectively did not have anything useful to offer in exchange for German help at that point.
When weighing claims of Villa conspiring with Germans, one should take into account that at the time, portraying Villa as a German sympathizer served the propaganda ends of both Carranza and Wilson.
The use of
Mauser rifles and carbines by Villa's forces does not necessarily indicate any German connection, these were widely used by all parties in the
Mexican Revolution, Mauser longarms being enormously popular weapons and having been standard issue in the Mexican Army, which had begun adopting 7 mm Mauser system arms as early as 1895. Mexican Secretary Of Defense - Armies of the Revolution
Pancho Villa in films, video, and television
Villa represented in films by himself in
1912,
1913, and 1914. Many other actors have represented him, such as:
Footnotes
References
- Guadalupe Villa y Rosa Helia Villa (eds.), Retrato autobiográfico, 1894-1914, Mexico City, Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México: Taurus: Santillana Ediciones Generales, c2003 (2004 printing). ISBN 968-19-1311-6.
- Friedrich Katz, Life and Times of Pancho Villa, Stanford University Press, 1998, ISBN 0-8047-3046-6
- Jeff Howell, Pancho Villa, Outlaw, Hero, Patriot, Cutthroat: Evaluating the Many Faces of Historical Text Archive
External links
- Statue of Pancho Villa, the Mexican Revolutionary Leader in Tucson, Arizona, United States
- Encyclopædia Britannica, Pancho Villa
- Photos of Villa and the Mexican Revolution - Warning Some disturbing images. Some of these photos are also in the book The Wind That Swept Mexico.
Pancho Villa - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Doroteo Orango Arámbula (June 5, 1878 – July 23, 1923), better known as Francisco or "Pancho" Villa, was a Mexican Revolutionary general. As commander of the División del Norte ...
PANCHO VILLA PAGE
The definitive Pancho Villa site - lots of pictures - interesting a captivating text - Battle of Ojinaga - Columbus, New Mexicio raid.
Pancho Villas :: Home
Mexican restaurants in Edinburgh and Glasgow. Photographs, menus, prices, location information and a job application form.
Pancho Villas :: Edinburgh
Mexican restaurants in Edinburgh and Glasgow. Traditional food is served with a modern spin in an atmosphere which is vibrant, fun and informal.
PANCHO VILLA 1878-1923 - HISTORY OF MEXICO ON MEXICO CONNECT
Mexico's History on Mexico Connect: - Pancho Villa. ... 1878 - 1923. Image by John Hardman - E-mail - Web Page SYNOPSIS Born June 5, 1877, '78 or '79 in Grande, or San Juan del ...
MotoDiscovery
Agency provides guided motorcycle tours of Colonial Mexico. Tours start and return from/to Texas.
Pancho Villa
Мексиканский Ресторан Панчо Вилья
Pancho Villa
Pancho Villa was a Mexican revolutionary leader who advocated for the poor and wanted agrarian reform. Though he was a killer, a bandit, and a revolutionary leader, many remember ...
YouTube - MUERTE DE PANCHO VILLA
Rate: 141 ratings. Sign in to rate. Views: 219,710. Share: Favorite: Playlists: Flag: MySpace. Facebook. Digg (more share options) (fewer share options) This video will appear on ...
Pancho Villa Taqueria
mexican restaurant ... 3071 16th St San Francisco, CA 94103 Daily 10:00am-12:00pm Tel: (415) 864-8840